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This
principle defines what constitutes the nation mentioned in
previous articles. lt reveals the concrete actuality of the
nation which is the final outcome of the long history of all
the people that have settled in Syria, inhabited it,
interacted
with
each other and finally became fused in one people. This
process started with the people of the Neolithic age who
preceded the Canaanites and Chaldeans in settling this land,
and continued through to the Akkadians, the Canaanites, the
Chaldeans, Assyrians, Arameans, Amorites, and Hittites. Thus
the principle of Syrian nationhood is not based on race or
blood, but rather on the natural social unity derived from
homogeneous intermixing. Through this principle the
interests, the aims and the ideals of the Syrian nation are
unified and the national cause is guarded against
disharmony, disintegration and strife that result from
primitive loyalties to blood ties.
The
alleged racial purity of any nation is a groundless myth. It
is found only in savage groups, and even there it is rare.
The Syrian nation consists of a mixture of Canaanites,
Akkadians, Chaldeans, Assyrians, Arameans, Hiffites, and
Metanni as the French nation is a mixture of Gauls,
Ligurians, Franks, etc... and the Italian nation of Romans,
Latins, Etruscans, etc... the same being true of every other
nation.
The
Syrian nation denotes this society which possesses organic
unity. Though of mixed origins, this society has come to
constitute a single society living in a distinguished
environment known historically as Syria or the Fertile
Crescent. The common stocks, Canaanites, Chaldeans, Arameans,
Assyrians, Amorites, Hiffites, Metanni and Akkadians
etc...whose blending is an indisputable historical fact
constitute the ethnic-historical-cultural basis of Syria's
unity whereas the Syrian Fertile Crescent constitutes the
geographic-economic-strategic basis of this unity.
This
ethnic and geographical reality has been marred by
successive historic events which destroyed documentation and
led to the substitution of various foreign accounts for
authentic facts and distorted through various
interpretations of our national history. A large number of
historians have confined their definition of SYRIA to
Byzantine or late Hellenic 'Syria', whose boundaries
extended from the Taurus range and the Euphrates to the Suez
thus excluding the Assyrians and Chaldeans from Syrian
History. Other historians have further confined this
definition to the region between Cilicia and Palestine, thus
leaving out Palestine. All these historians were aliens who
were unable to grasp the reality of the Syrian nation and
its environment and the process of its development.
Moreover, most of the Syrian historians who derived their
information from foreign sources without adequate criticism,
have followed their lead-Thus the truth was falsified and
our genuine cause was lost.
The
history of the ancient Syrian states (Akkadian, Chaldean,
Assyrian, Hittite, Canaanite, Aramean, Amorite) point to one
and the same trend: the political, economic, and social
unity of the Syrian Fertile Crescent-This fact should enable
us to view the Assyrian and Chaldean wars, aimed at
dominating the whole of Syria, in a new light. These were
internal wars, a struggle for supremacy among the powerful
groups and dynasties within the nation which was still in
the making and which later attained its maturity.
This
principle is not in the least incompatible with the fact
that Syria is one of the nations of the Arab World, nor is
this latter fact at variance with the statement that Syria
is a complete nation with sovereign rights over its
territory and consequently with a distinct and independent
national cause. It is the overlooking of this principle that
has given the religious sects in Syria the means of
disuniting the country into a Mohammedan-Arab faction on the
one hand and a Christian-Phoenician one, on the other, so
that the unity of the nation is thereby destroyed and its
energies dissipated.
This
principle would redeem Syria from the blood bigotries which
are apt to cause the neglect of national interests. For
those Syrians who believe or feel that they are of Aramaic
extraction would no longer be actuated to fan Aramaic blood
loyalty , so long as the principle of Social Nationalist
unity and the equality of civic, political and social rights
and duties are guaranteed, and no ethnic or racial
discrimination in Syria is made. Similarly, those Syrians
who claim to descend from a Phoenician (Canaanite), Arab, or
Crusader stock, would no longer have allegiance but to their
Syrian community. Thus would genuine national consciousness
arise. The unity of the Syrian nation arose from the
elements which have formed in the course of history the
Syrian people and the mental and spiritual traits of the
Syrian nation.
This
principle cannot be said to imply that Jews are a part of
the Syrian nation and equal in rights and duties to the
Syrians. Such an interpretation is incompatible with this
principle which excludes the integration of elements with
alien and exclusive racial loyalties in the Syrian nation.
Such elements cannot fit into any homogeneous nation.
There
are large settlements of immigrants in Syria, such as the
Armenians, Kurds and Circassians, whose assimilation is
possible given sufficient time. These elements may dissolve
in the nation and lose their special loyalties. But there is
one large settlement which can not in any respect be
reconciled to the principle of Syrian nationalism, and that
is the Jewish settlement. IT is a dangerous settlement which
can never be assimilated because it consists of a people
that, although it has mixed with many other peoples, has
remained a heterogeneous mixture, not a nation, with strange
stagnant beliefs and aims of its own, essentially
incompatible with Syrian rights and sovereignty ideals. It
is the duty of the Syrian Social Nationalists to repulse the
immigration of this people with all their might.
The definition of the Syrian
nation expounded in this principle is clearly different from
the various definitions of 'Syria' common in historical and
literary works in Syria and abroad. While historical
research unceasingly uncovers evidence of Unitarian
tendencies in the civilization of the "Near East", scholars
have frequently confined their definition of Syria to the
western part of the Fertile Crescent. Saadeh has often
stated that the limitations of terminology should not
detract from an understanding of the nature of the one
nation that has been shaped in the confines of the Fertile
Crescent. Indeed, he has suggested that if the 'name' has
limitation, the name can be altered to reflect the unity of
the nation. Indeed, he suggested that 'Souraqia', an
amalgamation of the Arabic forms of Syria and Iraq, could be
used to reflect the unity of the western and eastern
components of the Fertile Crescent, although he continued to
favor Syria because of its Syrian origin (possibly a
derivation from Assyrian, see below) over Iraq which is of
Persian derivation. Furthermore, it should be remembered
that before the formation of the modern state of Iraq in the
wake of the First World War, the term referred to southern
Mesopotamia and did not include the district of Mosul.
Several theories have been
advanced to explain the origin of the name Syria. It is, in
form, a Greek name (Suria) first used by the Greek historian
Herodotus (20). Herodotus applies the name Syrians to the
Phoenicians, Palestinians, and interestingly the
Cappadocians. He does not use distinction between Syrian and
Assyrian consistently and states: 'These people used to be
called Syrians by the Greeks, Assyrians being the name for
them elsewhere'. The various theories on the etymology of
'Syria' can be categorized as follows:
- from 'Assyria' by
elimination of the prefix. This is a popular theory and has
strong elements to support it considering that the Assyrian
empire included at various times the entire western part of
the Crescent. It is suggested by the statement of Herodotus
mentioned above. Further evidence comes from the Syrian
writer Lucian who, writing in Greek, referred to himself
interchangeably as 'Syrian' and 'Assyrian'.
-from
the Semitic name of the city of Tyre, 'Sur'. The Greeks,
however, referred to the city as 'Tur' and it is difficult
to see how they would derive the name of the land with an
's'. Chroniclers of the crusades have stated that the
inhabitants of the region gave this explanation for the
etymology of the name of the land. The reliability and
relevance of this late testimony, however, are difficult to
ascertain.
-from
the Ugaritic and biblical 'Siryon', a name for Mt. Hermon.
The Greeks, however, would have maintained the 'i' and had
no need to substitute a 'u' as in "Suria'.
-from
the Egyptian 'Hrw' (Hurri) used to refer to western Syria
during the Eighteenth to the Twenty-First Dynasties. This
assumes a transformation of the 'H' to the Coptic -S-,
apparently a development with many precedents. Herodotus
could easily have utilized the term the Egyptians used to
refer to their northeastern neighbors.
The Unitarian stirring in
the confines of the Fertile Crescent became manifest in the
development of economic ties, cultural interactions, and
population mixing all antecedent to the earliest political
forms of unity. The unity of the life cycle within the
Fertile Crescent has preceded the political unity of the
first territorial empire by the Akkadian rulers. The unity
of life has persisted when political unity was lacking. It
should be highlighted that the recurring territorial empires
arising in Syria under the mantles of the various forming
elements of the Syrian nation, have contributed to the
maintenance and promotion of the unity of life. Thus the
Babylonian empire of Hammurapi, the Assyrian empire, the
Neo-Babylonian state, the Seleucide rule etc... have given
political and administrative facilitatory forms to the unity
of life prevalent within the confines of the Syrian
homeland.
Saadeh ascribed the failure
of historians in general to grasp the historical unity
within the confines of the Fertile Crescent to the influence
of Greek and Roman historians. A similar opinion has been
independently advanced recently by the British historians
Amelie Kuhn and Susan Sherwin-White: 'Traditional approaches
to the study of the Hellenistic East after Alexander have
been mainly hellenocentric and have selected as of prime
importance the establishment and spread of Greek culture.
This is a serious lack which stems from the overriding
significance attached to the classical tradition in which
most scholars of the ancient world have been educated. One
of the results of this is that where there is no clear Greek
evidence a political, social and cultural vacuum is assumed.
Another distorting factor has been the preoccupation of
Roman historians who have tended (not unnaturally) to
concentrate almost exclusively on those regions of the
Seleucide empire which by the first century BC had become
part of the Roman empire. This approach has led them
to...[ignore] the central importance of the vast territories
controlled by the Seleucid east of the Euphrates'.
The question of limiting the
term 'Syria' to the western part of the Fertile Crescent is
examined by another historian in the same collection, Fergus
Millar: 'By 'Syria' I mean anywhere west of the Euphrates
and south of the Amanus mountains-essentially therefore the
area west of the Euphrates where Semitic languages were used
... This begs a question about Asia Minor (and especially
Cilicia), from which Aramaic documents are known, and a far
more important one about northern Mesopotamia and about
Babylonia; Should we not, that is, see the various
Aramaic-speaking areas of the Fertile Crescent as
representing a single culture, or at any rate closely
connected cultures, and therefore not attempt to study the
one area without the others?'. |